The ending and all those poetic images make Annihilation ripe for allegorical interpretation, but that ham-fisted approach would reduce Garland’s expansive vision. It suggests how much of what we have seen has been shaped by the characters’ points of view, and how delicately Portman has shaped her role. The film’s mind-bending conclusion is wonderfully open-ended. The minimalist, electronic score by Geoff Barrow (of the group Portishead) and Ben Salisbury adds a subtle layer of mystery. There are scenes that evoke 2001, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Alien and any number of Terrence Malick films. Garland playfully borrows from classic genre films and makes those references and influences his own. “Almost none of us commit suicide,” Ventress says about the team’s apparent suicide mission, extending it to a sweeping assessment of human nature. In flashback we learn that Lena’s marriage was not as perfect as it seemed at the start. The further the team explores, the more we see of each character’s particular vulnerability. Rob Hardy, who was also the cinematographer on Ex Machina, makes each image graceful and each scary moment visceral. Or are the women experiencing shared hallucinations? As Lena approaches a lighthouse assumed to be the source of The Shimmer, she encounters a beach on which trees made of shards of glass or ice rise out of the sand. White deer have antlers made of pink-flowering tree branches. Multi-coloured flowers of different species climb a tree trunk. And Lena quickly discovers that all life forms, not just the threatening animals, are mutating. They find horrifying evidence of the previous team’s experience, which only deepens the mystery. Within The Shimmer, the women wield guns and at times experience group memory loss. “All scientists,” she is told, and that’s the end of that. “All women?” Lena asks when she meets the other members. The fact that this is a female team is handled perfectly in an aside. Josie, a physicist, is played by Tessa Thompson, who is always so good that you wish her role here were not so underwritten (or over-edited). Tuva Novotny plays Cass, an anthropologist. Gina Rodriquez gets the splashiest role and comes through as the tough, quick-to-anger paramedic, Anya. When it turns out that Kane is the only survivor of his own trip into The Shimmer, Portman joins the next team in, led by a terse psychologist, Dr Ventress (Jennifer Jason Leigh). Eyes matter in this film, from the characters’ opaque or revealing gazes to abstract images that make it feel as if we’re staring into the eye of the sun or the moon. The deadened look in Isaac’s eyes is evidence of how much the actor can do with a glance, and of how effectively Garland uses extreme close-ups. Her husband, Kane (Oscar Isaac), who disappeared on a secret military mission a year before, comes home as a nearly catatonic, changed man. The film is a long flashback in which we learn that Portman’s character, Lena, is an Army veteran, now a biology professor at Johns Hopkins University. We first see Portman being questioned by men in HazMat suits after her return from The Shimmer, and learn she is the lone survivor of her expedition. Garland cleverly lays out the plot, from Jeff VanderMeer’s bestselling novel. Black Panther: The most radical blockbuster ever? Isle of Dogs is stop-motion at its best Throughout, Garland fills the screen with images that become ever more ravishing as the team gets closer to some answers. Mutated beasts, including a bear and an enormous white alligator, pounce on the team apparently out of nowhere. It addresses the psychology of self-destructive behaviour. Annihilation is philosophical about human nature and identity, without being in the least pretentious. Following his sharp focus on artificial intelligence in Ex Machina, Garland has written and directed a film that is broader but scene-for-scene just as masterful.
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